About us
The Center for the Study of Citizenship is the premier global institution dedicated to the interdisciplinary study of and promotion of citizenship.
We promote interdisciplinary research and exchange about citizenship within a global community of scholars, students, political, community/business leaders and the general public. Founded in 2001, the center encourages analysis of the relationship between citizens and the political, social, economic and cultural communities of which they are a part.
Our mission
- Foster the study of citizenship as an interdisciplinary academic field
- Establish a forum to stimulate and shape public discourse about citizenship
From the director
During the past half-century, globalization has transformed the meaning of citizenship. A subject that was always fundamental to understanding human society is now increasingly compelling. The urgent need to understand citizenship at the dawn of the new millennium has encouraged people around the globe to consider questions of identity, group membership, status, rights and obligations from a variety of political, social, economic and cultural perspectives. Because they study citizenship as it relates to specific issues (like civic education or corporate citizenship), they do not consider their own part in the development of a new field of study. The center aims to assume a leadership role in the creation and development of this new field.
The center has taken major strides toward establishing citizenship studies as a field of interdisciplinary research. We have organized major conferences, including one on the idea of patriotism in the modern world and another on the 50th anniversary of Brown v. Board of Education, which was co-sponsored by the American Bar Association. The center also has begun to disseminate that research through publication. The distinguished publisher, Rowman & Littlefield, will publish a volume of essays drawn from the patriotism conference, to be entitled, The Many Faces of Patriotism and the Wayne Law Review is publishing articles from two of the center's other conferences. In order to build the field of citizenship studies, the center has established the Conference in Citizenship Studies. As part of its effort to establish global leadership in the field of citizenship studies, the center has invited scholars from Germany, South Africa and Singapore to participate in its conferences and seminars and, in the future, intends to broaden international participation in the intellectual life of the center by developing partnerships with universities around the world, by establishing a formal international network of scholars, by utilizing the latest technology to host international seminars and conferences and by publishing a scholarly journal.
The center also has become a valuable forum for the discussion of citizenship. We consistently engage non-academics through collaborative programming, such as its corporate citizenship symposia, which examines the civic responsibilities of business leaders and corporations. The center also has organized conversations about citizenship between visiting scholars and community, business and political leaders. We plan to advance community discussion of citizenship through summer institutes for secondary school teachers, public lectures, an enhanced website and a newsletter that will be distributed electronically. The center encourages dialogue between academics who study citizenship and leaders of the private and public sectors whose work addresses issues relating to it.
Underlying the center's ambitions is the belief that research on and public discussion of, citizenship if conducted in a politically neutral forum will promote a knowledgeable and active citizenry in the United States and around the world.
Marc W. Kruman, director